Either that or go see your school tomorrow. I know teachers etc at your school can see your hsc results (cannot see atar) so surely they can give them to you.
Hey guys,
This may seem like a really dumb question but to access my atar online do I just log onto my UAC account and there will be a link somewhere?
Cheers and goodluck
The answer to 15 is a. Force actually stays the same all the way around as the side of the coil is always 90 degrees to the field lines. We sometimes this that force gets less as the motor turns but is actually the turning force (torque) which gets less.
I agree that 3 should be b. Using the right hand rule the field lines are in the same direction (attracted) on the side closest to us and in oppisite directions (repelled) on the far side or the rod. Therefore it spins anticlockwise. I thing c was a distracter
That won't get top ten. There would be many people out there who know the content of the syllabus concisely and if you are good at calculations it wasn't that hard an exam..
This may be true but my physics teacher is a HSC marker (has been last two years and is this year again) and he said on any calculation question in the science exams if you write down the correct answer they have to give you full marks
Head up chem scales alright and I'm sure you didn't do that bad.. And all these people who are saying it was easy haven't seen the marking criteria yet..
I dont understand.. This isn't the way I worked out my answer but just another way of looking at it.. 0.1 moles of any substance is the same amount of particles. But in actetic acid not all molecules ionise therefore dont you not need as many NaOH molecules to neutralise the solution as you do...
When they do this process they harvest the sugar and crush the sugar cane leaves (containing cellulose) to eventually produce polyethylene.. So The answer is still cellulose. Don't worry I got fooled. Didnt even read the cup just saw the shape and thought polystyrene! Fuck :/
I didn't calculate anything.. Do you think you would get the mark if you stated Cl is more electronegative than Br and will therefore not be oxidised spontaneously..